Mr. Speaker, I am very happy to help the member. The process is that we have a democratic party on this side of the House, a party that listens to its caucus, a party that is interested in ensuring that its members get out and talk to their constituents and bring those views to the caucus process. It is very democratic. We do not see ejection of members because they disagree with their leader and so forth. We basically have a very democratic process, so the member is actually watching the will of the people of Canada.
I mentioned earlier that I was talking to my constituents today about the budget. They are very supportive. I took the plane back to Ottawa and when I got in the Chamber I was surprised that members for the Reform Party were talking about the flat tax. The flat tax was their argument eight years ago. I thought somehow I had entered a time warp or something when I got on the plane. I thought, my God, what happened.
The only person in North America still talking about the flat tax is Steven Forbes who just fell out of the Republican leadership race. No one in North America is still supporting the flat tax except those people over there who do not seem to have awakened to discover that people do not want it.